Written by Emma Baker
When my mother visited Budapest, without any idea what to expect, she resorted to Lewis Caroll for a suitable analogy, "I feel like Alice, and I’ve fallen through the rabbit hole.’ The next evening we went to a Ligeti concert in the Palace of the Arts. The bandana coiffed bassoonist stood up at the end of the first piece. I heard Tojás-something.

Written by Lien Hoang Việt Nam and Hungary go together as obviously as, well, let's say
their respective soupy icons, pho and goulash. But as a Việt Nam-born
student in Hungary, I take any reason to blend the two countries. Enter
Édenkert, the house of Vietnamese culture and food, located on the outskirts of Budapest.

By Ádám Terjék
Translated by Judit Révész
The picture of the opening of the Hungarian-Austrian border in 1989 is living vividly in my memory: in the television news of 10 September 1989 a group of East German tourists exult and rejoice at the announcement of Gyula Horn,

Have you ever dreamed of crossing the threshold of the oh-so-mysterious and so-hard-to-enter world of film-makers? Aye, so have we. That’s why we decided to bring you a ground-breaking debut, lovely FUNZINE friends: the FUNZINE CineFest Trip, at The CineFest International Festival of Young Filmmakers, Miskolc, between September 18th and 20th! Image: funzine.huSynopsis (warning!

By Judit Révész
If you would like to visit Lake Balaton, the largest lake of Hungary and whole Central Europe, but you prefer calmness and silence and have the shiver from and the crowded night life of Siófok or Keszthely, you should spend your holiday in Fövenyes, a nice little resort village on the northern shore of the lake.

By Judit Révész
Our first day on the Sziget Festival (14th August) didn’t begin very well. When we arrived, it started to rain and the island seemed to be deserted. In addition, our Brunch Talk guest, Krisztián Grecsó (writer) had to excuse himself from coming, because he got ill. Fine, good start.